Financial Times 16,371 by Mudd

Prize puzzle from the Weekend FT of January 11, 2020

This seems a tad lacklustre after Mudd’s previous gem but it is a very typical Mudd with, for example, lots of double definitions.  My favourite clues are 16 (GRUBBY), 17 (BOUNDLESS), 18 (BETRAYAL) and 26 (ONCE).

Across
1 BEFALL Happen to see, finally, female during social event (6)
[se]E + F (female) together in (during) BALL (social event)
4 STEP ON IT Hurry to convert set point (4,2,2)
Anagram (to convert) of SET POINT
10 CARD SHARP Character, 13 across cheat (4,5)
CARD (character) + SHARP (13 across, i.e. accidental)
11 ORGAN Newspaper that may be vital (5)
Double definition
12 MOPE Drop head in second exercise (4)
MO (second) + PE (exercise)
13 ACCIDENTAL Unintended mark added to note (10)
Double definition
15 NEWPORT Further left, somewhere in Wales (7)
NEW (further) + PORT (left)
16 GRUBBY Dirty, like food perhaps? (6)
Double definition with the second worthy of the Uxbridge English Dictionary
19 ORCHID Plant buried by huge mammal (6)
ORC (huge mammal) + HID (buried).  It was a surprise to me but I found ‘orc’, in addition to ‘orca’, meaning killer whale in two dictionaries.
21 PROFUSE Generous teacher taking employment (7)
PROF (teacher) + USE (employment)
23 INTERESTED Curious trend, see it developing (10)
Anagram (developing) of TREND SEE IT
25 ODER European river, stretch of Loire doubling back (4)
Reverse (back) hidden (stretch of) word
27 DUMBO Nothing follows silent film (5)
DUMB (silent) + O (nothing)
28 INTENSELY Popular figures see very much (9)
IN (popular) + TENS (figures) + ELY (see)
29 MISHEARD Wrongly understood, his dream distorted (8)
Anagram (distorted) of HIS DREAM
30 VESSEL Container ship (6)
Double definition
Down
1 BECOMING Getting appropriate (8)
Double definition
2 FIREPOWER Military might prefer, I suspect, to suppress cry of anguish (9)
OW (cry of anguish) in (to suppress) anagram (suspect) of PREFER I
3 LIST Lean menu (4)
Double definition
5 TOPPING Wonderful garnish (7)
Double definition
6 PROSECUTOR Court poser, fancy legal official (10)
Anagram (fancy) of COURT POSER
7 NIGHT Listen to man when most are asleep (5)
Homophone (listen to) of “knight” (man)
8 TINGLE Sense of excitement putting last of report on fire (6)
[repor]T + INGLE (fire)
9 MASCOT Initially missile on course – is that lucky? (6)
M[issile] + ASCOT (course)
14 BOTHERSOME Vexatious British, people elsewhere love me (10)
B (British) + OTHERS (people elsewhere) + O (love) + ME (me)
17 BOUNDLESS Inexhaustible, like a lame kangaroo? (9)
BOUND-LESS (like a lame kangaroo?)
18 BETRAYAL Barely treasonous at first, a criminal act that’s treasonous! (8)
Anagram (criminal) of BARELY T[reasonous] A
20 DOSSIER Achiever filing two strong leaders and one report (7)
S[trong] S[trong] + I (one) together in (filing) DOER (achiever)
21 PRETTY Relatively appealing (6)
Double definition
22 DIADEM Crown in sea, charity dredged up (6)
MED (sea) + AID (charity) all backwards (dredged up)
24 TOMES Thousand in probably ten large books (5)
M (thousand) in (in) TOES (probably ten)
26 ONCE 1/100 in days gone by (4)
ONE (1) in (/, i.e. divided by) C (100)

5 comments on “Financial Times 16,371 by Mudd”

  1. This was at the easy end of his scale whereas the Paul Prize, on the same day was pretty much at the other.

    Quite a contrast.

  2. Thanks Mudd and Pete

    Was a little more mundane than the usual fare by JH with those higher number than usual double definition clues.  Quickly wrote in PACKET for the first one of those at 30a and had to revisit it later on during the solve to get it right.  Did like the play between 10a and 13a.

    Finished in the bottom half with ORCHID, PROFUSE and PRETTY the last few in.

  3. Many thanks to both. I found this relatively straightforward although not easy. While it is likely Mudd was referring to the Orca in 19a, the mythological monsters known as Orcs are usually portrayed as vaguely mammalian. I think we have run into the marine Orc in other crosswords too.

  4. Thanks Mudd & Pete.

    Even I found this weekend puzzle easy!

    In 26 down the mathematics is ONE divided by C, not the opposite as the blog says.

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